Article
Details
Citation
Fleming DH (2019) Third-culture Hu¨¤llywood: or, 'Chimerica' the cinematic return. Transnational Screens, 10 (3), pp. 184-200. https://doi.org/10.1080/25785273.2019.1658932
Abstract
Recognising that ¡®Chinese cinema(s)¡¯ have spearheaded calls for a ¡®critical transnationalism¡¯ I here take the recent neologism Huallywood on its word¡ªbut not its?tone¡ªto posit an alternative ¡®third culture¡¯ ¡°H¨¤ullywood¡± (from?hu¨¤?(»¯) drawing in associations with change and transformation) model that helps us understand the making and marketing of mega-budget and mega-revenue transborder films produced in-between what we might call global Hollywood and transnational Huallywood. Seeing Huallywood as a multi-faceted assemblage, I also harnesses the mythical figure of the chimera as a conceptual guide, which in turn becomes articulated to discussion of a cinematic ¡®return¡¯ of the economic behemoth that the historian Niall Ferguson¡¯s and economist Moritz Schularick christened?Chimerica. Films such as?The Great Wall, and?Rogue One: A Star Wars Story?serve as illustrative examples of what a Chimerican or H¨¤ullywood?cinema looks like today: this being neither Hollywood or Huallywood, but rather composed of bits and pieces of each. By building its critical arguments through a consideration of news texts and cinematic paratexts, this essay also highlights the importance of studying extra-cinematic media commonly threatened by problems of ¡®paratextual ephemerality¡¯; which all the same play an important role in producing cinematic discourses.
Keywords
Huallywood; critical transnationalism; third culture; ephemeral media; The Great Wall; Star Wars
Journal
Transnational Screens: Volume 10, Issue 3
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 31/12/2019 |
Publication date online | 27/08/2019 |
Date accepted by journal | 13/08/2019 |
URL | |
Publisher | Informa UK Limited |
ISSN | 2578-5273 |
eISSN | 2578-5265 |
People (1)
Senior Lecturer, Communications, Media and Culture